We actually could only duplicate the behavior on one device that has Siri capability, an iPhone 4S, but not the iPhone 5 (yet). This means that the bug appears to be an iPhone 4 or 4S-only affair, but that could just be a lack of ability to time it correctly. We’re still investigating the iPhone 5, but the folks at iPhoneblog.de have apparently had some luck making it work on that device.

With the data that we have at the moment, it appears that this bypass bug is linked to the pre-Siri Voice Dial system, so you can prevent the issue entirely by disabling voice dialing in the Settings>General>Passcode screen or just leaving Siri enabled, as we haven’t been able to get it to work when the more modern voice control system is up and running. Note that we have not been able to test every permutation of the iPhone with this bug, so there may be some cases in which it does work on Siri-enabled devices (a Verizon iPhone 4S, for insistance, has not been tested).

The bug appears to only give access to photos and contacts and, like all of these bugs, requires physical access to the device. The contacts access is simple, as the bypass drops you out to the phone interface, and photos can be accessed through the ‘assign new picture’ dialog inside the contact creation process.

After reports of a series of lock screen bypass bugs, Apple released iOS 6.1.3 to fix them, crediting the discovery of the problem to Christopher Heffley of theMedium.ca. Apple’s security notes stated that “a logic issue existed in the handling of emergency calls from the lock screen. This issue was addressed through improved lock state management.”

Unfortunately, it appears that Apple has yet to plug all of the holes in the lock screen process, in at least some limited device cases. We’ve reached out to Apple for comment on this latest bug.


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Datat source: TNW (By MATTHEW PANZARINO)